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Dedication to Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
STUDY, LEARN AND LIVE (continued) SAINT LOUIS UNIVERSITY JESUIT MISSION “WHAT WE DO HERE, WHICH IS ESPECIALLY UNIQUE, IS TO The Mission of Saint Louis University is the pursuit of truth for the greater PROVIDE A COMMUNITY WITHIN THE COMMUNITY FOR OUR glory of God and for the service of humanity. The University seeks excellence in UNDERREPRESENTED MINORITY STUDENTS. THE FEELING OF the fulfillment of its corporate purposes of teaching, research, healthcare and service to the community. It is dedicated to leadership in the continuing quest BELONGING ENHANCES SOCIAL, ACADEMIC AND EMOTIONAL DEDICATION TO for understanding of God’s creation and for the discovery, dissemination and DEVELOPMENT.” – MICHAEL RAILEY, M.D. integration of the values, knowledge and skills required to transform society in the spirit of the Gospels. As a Catholic, Jesuit university, this pursuit is motivated DIVERSITY, EQUITY You’ll love our city! Check out the new sports-anchored entertainment district by the inspiration and values of the Judeo-Christian tradition and is guided by in the heart of downtown Ballpark Village St. Louis! Attend one of the over 150 the spiritual and intellectual ideals of the Society of Jesus. events scheduled each year including concerts, family shows, community events AND INCLUSION and Saint Louis University men’s and women’s Billiken basketball games at the on Saint Louis University celebrating over 200 years in Jesuit education. campus 10,600 seat Chaifetz Arena. Check out the trendiest boutiques and upscale dining establishments in Clayton and the Central West End. If live music is your OFFICE OF DIVERSITY, EQUITY AND INCLUSION thing, Soulard boasts some of the best blues venues in town. -
MISSOURI Sample Itinerary DOWNTOWN ST
St. Louis MISSOURI Sample Itinerary DOWNTOWN ST. LOUIS CLARK AVE. MARKET JEFFERSON ATTRACTIONS Day 1 WASHINGTON AVE. 23RD � Old Courthouse LEGEND 22ND Urgent Care � Gateway Arch 22ND Metrolink Stop � Old Cathedral 21ST 21ST Downtown Trolley ST. LOUIS One-Way Street � Lunch: Downtown ‒ Ballpark Village AQUARIUM 20TH THE UNION Green Space 25 � City Museum WHEEL STATION 19TH Visitor Center UNION STATION � Dinner: The Hill 18TH 18TH Downtown Bicycle Station Blues Triangle Day 2 17TH 16TH 16TH � Forest Park: Zoo, Art Museum, History Museum, TRANSPORTATION GATEWAY CENTER CITY MUSEUM STIFEL 15TH Science Center THEATRE DELMAR CIVIC CENTER � Lunch: Forest Park Area or Central West End 14TH 14TH � Cathedral Basilica of Saint Louis (New Cathedral) 13TH CHESTNUT M.L. KING CARR DR. LUCAS OLIVE COLE LOCUST ST. CHARLES SOLDIERSPINE � World Chess Hall of Fame MEMORIAL TUCKER BLVD. � MARKET Dinner and Theatre SPRUCE WASHINGTON AVE. CONVENTION PLAZA CLARK 11TH N Day 3 THE JUDICIAL LEARNING CENTER � St. Louis Aquarium 10TH WALNUT GROCERY CULINARIA 40 � Train Shed & The Wheel CITYGARDEN 64 9TH BUSCH STADIUM COLE � Lunch: Union Station or Downtown AMERICA’S CENTER � Soldier’s Memorial 8TH MARKET CLARK 8TH & PINE CARDINALS CONVENTION PLAZA 7TH THE DOME 7TH HALL OF FAME AT AMERICA’S CENTER � Citygarden GRATIOT CERRE NATIONAL BLUES MUSEUM KIENER PLAZA 6TH LUCAS OLD 15 MINS TO BROADWAY BROADWAY COURTHOUSE AIRPORT CONVENTION CENTER LUMIÉRE LINK BALLPARK What’s New & Noteworthy VILLAGE 44 4TH ECONOMY 4 SPRUCE MUSEUM MEMORIAL DRIVE M.L. KING MEMORIAL BRIDGE LUMIÈRE | MEMORIAL DRIVE LACLEDE’S LANDING CASINO St. Louis Aquarium stlouisunionstation.com 2ND The St. Louis Aquarium at Union Station is the next phase of OLD CATHEDRAL development at the National Historic Landmark train station in 1ST GATEWAY ARCH N. -
St. Louis Street Performers United Voluntary Best Practices Guidelines
VOLUNTARY BEST PRACTICES GUIDELINES Street performers, also known as buskers, make a valuable contribution to our vibrant urban fabric. We want to encourage street performances while respecting the reasonable expectations of the greater public to enjoy peace and quiet in their homes and the ability of businesses to conduct commerce. These voluntary guidelines seek to balance the interests of performers with those of residents, visitors and businesses. A respectful environment will create more opportunities for local street performers and make the region a welcoming destination for traveling artists. Following a court challenge, the City of St. Louis repealed its overly broad street performer ordinance in October 2013. Elsewhere in the region, other municipalities have not adopted street performer ordinances. So, street performers are free to perform in any public location, although they are subject to other regulations prohibiting disturbing the peace, obstruction of public passageways, aggressive panhandling and intrusive noise. Drafted by an interested group of participating street performers in collaboration with the St. Louis Volunteer Lawyers and Accountants for the Arts (VLAA) and the American Civil Liberties Union of Missouri (ACLU), this consensus document is based on the belief that street performers are largely self- regulating. Our common sense “time, place and manner” guidelines are not intended to prohibit or hinder artistic expression, which is protected by the First Amendment. The goal is to ensure that public areas remain safe and useful for their primary purposes while asserting the rights of street performers and other artists. Street performers who want to follow these voluntary guidelines can obtain a free annual St. -
Report No. 2002-02
REPORT TO THE UTAH LEGISLATURE Report No. 2002-02 A Performance Audit of Hogle Zoo April 2002 Audit Performed by: Audit Manager John Schaff Auditor Supervisor Janice Coleman Audit Staff Darren Marshall Wayne Kidd Aaron Eliason Consultants Stephen R. Wylie Horrocks Engineers 1 Table of Contents Page Digest ........................................................i Chapter I Introduction ...................................................1 Audit Scope and Objectives .....................................3 Chapter II Hogle Zoo Is Not Performing Well in the Market ........................5 Increasing Marketing Expenditures Have Not Halted Market Share Decline ..............................................8 Many Animal Exhibits Are Old and Dated .........................12 Chapter III Present Zoo Site Is Too Small .....................................17 Probable Bond Life Exceeds Site Capacity Life ......................17 Parking Capacity Does Not Allow One Million Visitors ...............18 Two Alternatives Should Be Explored .............................20 Chapter IV Construction of the Entryway Is a Concern ............................25 Construction of the Entryway Was a Questionable Financial Decision .....27 Construction of the Entryway Impedes Animal Exhibits ...............29 Chapter V Both Expenditures and Savings Increased upon Receipt of ZAP Funding ................................................31 Marketing, Animal Care, and Administration Received Largest Expenditure Increases .......................................31 The New -
Howard Associate Professor of Natural History and Curator Of
INGI AGNARSSON PH.D. Howard Associate Professor of Natural History and Curator of Invertebrates, Department of Biology, University of Vermont, 109 Carrigan Drive, Burlington, VT 05405-0086 E-mail: [email protected]; Web: http://theridiidae.com/ and http://www.islandbiogeography.org/; Phone: (+1) 802-656-0460 CURRICULUM VITAE SUMMARY PhD: 2004. #Pubs: 138. G-Scholar-H: 42; i10: 103; citations: 6173. New species: 74. Grants: >$2,500,000. PERSONAL Born: Reykjavík, Iceland, 11 January 1971 Citizenship: Icelandic Languages: (speak/read) – Icelandic, English, Spanish; (read) – Danish; (basic) – German PREPARATION University of Akron, Akron, 2007-2008, Postdoctoral researcher. University of British Columbia, Vancouver, 2005-2007, Postdoctoral researcher. George Washington University, Washington DC, 1998-2004, Ph.D. The University of Iceland, Reykjavík, 1992-1995, B.Sc. PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS University of Vermont, Burlington. 2016-present, Associate Professor. University of Vermont, Burlington, 2012-2016, Assistant Professor. University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras, 2008-2012, Assistant Professor. National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC, 2004-2007, 2010- present. Research Associate. Hubei University, Wuhan, China. Adjunct Professor. 2016-present. Icelandic Institute of Natural History, Reykjavík, 1995-1998. Researcher (Icelandic invertebrates). Institute of Biology, University of Iceland, Reykjavík, 1993-1994. Research Assistant (rocky shore ecology). GRANTS Institute of Museum and Library Services (MA-30-19-0642-19), 2019-2021, co-PI ($222,010). Museums for America Award for infrastructure and staff salaries. National Geographic Society (WW-203R-17), 2017-2020, PI ($30,000). Caribbean Caves as biodiversity drivers and natural units for conservation. National Science Foundation (IOS-1656460), 2017-2021: one of four PIs (total award $903,385 thereof $128,259 to UVM). -
An Adoption Donation of Only $35 Will Help a Zoo Animal of Your Choice Get the Specialized Care It Deserves. Choose from These Incredible Animals
Want to make a huge difference in the life of a Hogle Zoo animal? With our new Zoo A.D.O.P.T. program, now you can! An adoption donation of only $35 will help a zoo animal of your choice get the specialized care it deserves. Choose from these incredible animals: Polar Bear Grey Wolf Grizzly Bear Siamese Crocodile California Sea Lion Aldabra Tortoise African Elephant White-Handed Gibbon White Rhinoceros Ostriches Reticulated Giraffe Bald Eagle Amur Leopard Bornean Orangutan Amur Tiger Western Lowland Gorilla Snow Leopard Hoffman’s Sloth Want to give even more? That’s wonderful! We have five levels of support: LEVEL 1 2 3 4 5 LEVEL 1 2 3 4 5 Cost $35 $60 $85 $200 $500 Cost $35 $60 $85 $200 $500 Adoption Certificate x x x x x Invite to Adopter Event x x x Animal Fact Sheet x x x x x Recognition at Zoo x x x Adoption Magnet x x x x x Keeper Talk* x x Recognition on Website x x x x x Tickets to the Zoo 2 4 Animal Photo x x x x Enrichment Opportunity* x Animal Plush x x x x *Restrictions may apply For more information about how to adopt your animal, call our Zoo A.D.O.P.T. Ambassador at 801-584-1741 or email us at [email protected]. Current Zoo A.D.O.P.T.ers Joe and Laurie Vervaecke Features Utah’s Zoological Society Board Members What it Takes to Run the Zoo President 2 James E. Hogle Jr Vice President Paul M. -
Craig Bullen - Resume
Craig Bullen - Resume FILM / TV CREDITS (recent years only) PRODUCTION YEAR POSITION Eden 2020 Trainer Foxtel Cannonball Run TVC 2020 Animal Coordinator The Last Zombie 2020 Head Trainer Buckley’s Chance 2019 Animal Trainer Storm Boy 2017 Pelican Trainer Wake in Fright 2017 Dog Trainer Left Overs - Series 2 2016 Lion Trainer Red Dog: True Blue 2015 Dog Trainer/Horse Trainer War Horse 2010 Liberty Horse Trainer H2O Just Add Water 2008 Trainer Tostitos TVC 2008 Animal Trainer Heartbeat 2008 Horse Wrangler Mr. Bones II (South Africa) 2008 Animal Trainer Nicotinell (South Africa) 2008 Animal Trainer The Ruins 2007 Horse Wrangler Australia 2007 Animal Wrangler H2O, Just Add Water 2006 Horse Wrangler Elephant Tales (South Africa) 2005 Animal Trainer Charlotte’s Web 2005 Animal Trainer The Mask of Zorro (Mexico) 2004 Assistant Horse Trainer/Stunts Racing Stripes (South Africa) 2003 Zebra Trainer Mc Donald’s TVC 2002 Animal Trainer Singapore Airlines TVC 2002 Animal Trainer Mc Donald’s TVC 2002 Animal Trainer DHL Couriers TVC 2002 Animal Trainer Beast master - Series I & II 1999/2000 Animal Trainer Web www.animalsallaround.com | Email [email protected] LIVE SHOW CREDITS PRODUCTION YEAR POSITION Mogo Zoo Feb-Mar 2020 Animal Trainer/Presenter Mogo Zoo Christmas 2019 Animal Trainer/Presenter Paradise Country 2019 Animal Trainer/Presenter Australian Outback Spectacular 2015/2016 Circus Pony Trainer Private Function 2015 Elephant & Monkey Handler Australian Outback Spectacular 2014/2015 Liberty Pony Trainer Circus Joseph Ashton 2012 Liberty -
Australian Animal Care and Management Industry Sector
Australian Animal Care and Management Industry Sector Annual Update 2021 IRC Skills Forecast and Proposed Schedule of Work Prepared on behalf of the Animal Care and Management Industry Reference Committee (IRC) and Pharmaceutical Manufacturing IRC for the Australian Industry Skills Committee (AISC). Contents Purpose of the Annual Update ............................................................................................................................ 3 Method & Structure .............................................................................................................................................. 3 Industry Reference Committee ............................................................................................................................ 4 Executive Summary ............................................................................................................................................. 5 Section A: Overview ............................................................................................................................................ 6 Industry Developments .................................................................................................................................... 6 VET Qualifications & Employment Outcomes ................................................................................................. 9 Other Training Used by Employers ................................................................................................................ 10 Enrolment -
Panthera Leo)
CHARACTERISTATION OF POSITIVE WELFARE INDICES IN CAPTIVE AFRICAN LIONS (Panthera leo) Rachael Schildkraut 1 Faculty of Veterinary Science, The University of Sydney, Camperdown, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. 2006 2 Taronga Conservation Society Australia, Taronga Western Plains Zoo, Obley Rd, Dubbo, New South Wales, Australia 2830 For submission to the Faculty of Veterinary Science, The University of Sydney for fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Veterinary Science. 30 April 2017. The content of this thesis is my own work to the best of my knowledge. It has not been submitted for any other degree of purpose. I certify that the intellectual content of this thesis is my own and all assistance received and sources have been acknowledged. Rachael Schildkraut, SID: 430601066 i Acknowledgements I would like to thank my extensive research team that helped get me over the line - your combined knowledge from such diverse backgrounds was hugely appreciated. Bec, your no-nonsense, tough love approach was sorely needed and Neil you balanced that out perfectly with your super positive attitude. Great good cop/ bad cop combination and both your patience, support and knowledge was endless. To the Taronga Sydney members of the team, Vicky, Jess and Bec S thank you for your time, support and ideas as well as assistance in liaising with managers from various zoo’s and committees. To Ros, thanks for always having an open office and making time when I popped in last minute. To the lion keepers and managers at Taronga Zoo, Taronga Western Plains Zoo and Mogo Zoo, thank you so much for being so friendly, and accommodating. -
Additional Member Benefits Reciprocity
Additional Member Benefits Columbus Member Advantage Offer Ends: December 31, 2016 unless otherwise noted As a Columbus Zoo and Aquarium Member, you can now enjoy you can now enjoy Buy One, Get One Free admission to select Columbus museums and attractions through the Columbus Member Advantage program. No coupon is necessary. Simply show your valid Columbus Zoo Membership card each time you visit! Columbus Member Advantage partners for 2016 include: Columbus Museum of Art COSI Franklin Park Conservatory and Botanical Gardens (Valid August 1 - October 31, 2016) King Arts Complex Ohio History Center & Ohio Village Wexner Center for the Arts Important Terms & Restrictions: Receive up to two free general admissions of equal or lesser value per visit when purchasing two regular-priced general admission tickets. Tickets must be purchased from the admissions area of the facility you are visiting. Cannot be combined with other discounts or offers. Not valid on prior purchases. No rain checks or refunds. Some restrictions may apply. Offer expires December 31, 2016 unless otherwise noted. Nationwide Insurance As a Zoo member, you can save on your auto insurance with a special member-only discount from Nationwide. Find out how much you can save today by clicking here. Reciprocity Columbus Zoo Members Columbus Zoo members receive discounted admission to the AZA accredited Zoos in the list below. Columbus Zoo members must present their current membership card along with a photo ID for each adult listed on the membership to receive their discount. Each zoo maintains their own discount policies, and the Columbus Zoo strongly recommends calling ahead before visiting a reciprocal zoo. -
Education Programs
EDUCATION PROGRAMS 2017 hoglezoo.org Special Needs Camp & Classes Zoo Just for You “Zoo Just for You” programming has been developed for students with special needs. Live animals, photographs, skull models, pelts, animal figures and more are used to engage students and demonstrate concepts. Our program utilizes a sensory motor approach where students move between stations and are encouraged to touch, smell and feel all appropriate items. Registration closes one week prior to class date. www.hoglezoo.org/zoojustforyou Cost is $10 per student and includes accompanying caregiver. Magnificent Mammals On the Wing and in the Bush (ASD and developmental delays, ages 6-18) (Citizen science)(Blind/Low vision, ages 14-25) Do you have what it takes to be a mammal? You bet! From the North Pole to the South Pole, the rainforest Some mammals are larger than school buses, and to the desert, on land, in the sky and even underwater, others are smaller than your little finger, but they all birds are on the move! Discover some amazing bird have three things in common! Discover the three I.D.s species and how to identify them by sight or sound. of a mammal, and find out which ones break the Get the tools you need to become a citizen scientist rules. Class includes a short instructional time with and help track bird migration. Class includes a short pictures, animal artifacts, live animals, interactive play, instructional time with pictures, animal artifacts, live and guided short visit in the Zoo for the child and animals, interactive play, and a guided short visit in the accompanying adult. -
The IUCN Red List of Threatened Speciestm
Species 2014 Annual ReportSpecies the Species of 2014 Survival Commission and the Global Species Programme Species ISSUE 56 2014 Annual Report of the Species Survival Commission and the Global Species Programme • 2014 Spotlight on High-level Interventions IUCN SSC • IUCN Red List at 50 • Specialist Group Reports Ethiopian Wolf (Canis simensis), Endangered. © Martin Harvey Muhammad Yazid Muhammad © Amazing Species: Bleeding Toad The Bleeding Toad, Leptophryne cruentata, is listed as Critically Endangered on The IUCN Red List of Threatened SpeciesTM. It is endemic to West Java, Indonesia, specifically around Mount Gede, Mount Pangaro and south of Sukabumi. The Bleeding Toad’s scientific name, cruentata, is from the Latin word meaning “bleeding” because of the frog’s overall reddish-purple appearance and blood-red and yellow marbling on its back. Geographical range The population declined drastically after the eruption of Mount Galunggung in 1987. It is Knowledge believed that other declining factors may be habitat alteration, loss, and fragmentation. Experts Although the lethal chytrid fungus, responsible for devastating declines (and possible Get Involved extinctions) in amphibian populations globally, has not been recorded in this area, the sudden decline in a creekside population is reminiscent of declines in similar amphibian species due to the presence of this pathogen. Only one individual Bleeding Toad was sighted from 1990 to 2003. Part of the range of Bleeding Toad is located in Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park. Future conservation actions should include population surveys and possible captive breeding plans. The production of the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species™ is made possible through the IUCN Red List Partnership.